Monday, December 12, 2016

LAOS - Laos has its first martyrs

Historic Step for the Catholic Church in Laos where yesterday December
11, the solemn liturgy of beatification of 17 new martyrs, including
missionaries and lay Laotians was held in the Cathedral of the capital
Vientiane.

We are talking about a group formed by foreign missionaries and local
catechists killed between 1954 and 1970 by the communist Pathet Lao
guerrillas who seized power in the tiny nation of Southeast Asia.

Five
of them belong to the congregation of the Foreign Missions of Paris
(MEP), the first missionaries who in 1885 brought the Gospel in Laos;
six are Oblates of Mary Immaculate (OMI), and among them there is a
young Italian missionary Mario Borzaga, who died in 1960 at 27 years of
age, along with the local catechist Paolo Thoj Xyooj. Among the Laotians
beatified there is also the priest Joseph Thao Tien, the first Laotian
priest, killed in 1954, and four other native catechists.
The new martyrs were recognized by the Holy See in 2015, in two separate
causes for beatification: the first is that of Italian missionary Mario
Borzaga and Paolo Thoj Xyooj. The second concerns Joseph Thao Tien and
14 companions.
Pope Francis during the Angelus on Sunday, December 11, said he hopes
"their heroic fidelity to Christ can be of encouragement and example to
missionaries, especially catechists, who in mission lands play a
valuable and irreplaceable apostolic work, for which the entire Church
is grateful".
As reported to Fides, the solemn Eucharist for the beatification was
celebrated by Filipino Cardinal Orlando Quevedo, Special Envoy of Pope
Francis, in the cathedral of Vientiane. Also Vietnamese Cardinal Pierre
Nguyen Van Nhon, and Thai Cardinal Francis Xavier kriengsak kovitvanit,
the apostolic nuncio who arrived from Bangkok, as well as bishops,
priests, religious and faithful from Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam and other
neighboring countries were present.

Among the missionaries, there were
European representatives of the MEP and Omi. Over two thousand faithful
present, who filled the church and who were also crowded into an outdoor
area with big screens set up for the occasion. The celebration was also
attended by some representatives of the civil authorities.
Stressing that the martyrs "are heroes and their story is to be made
known to the younger generation", Cardinal Quevedo read a message with
the solemn apostolic blessing sent by Pope Francis, announcing that the
liturgical feast of the new Blessed is set for December 16.
In the new climate of openness and availability shown by the Laotian
government, Archbishop Paul Tschang In-Nam, apostolic nuncio in Bangkok
and apostolic delegate in Myanmar and Laos, at the end of the Mass
expressed his thanks, hoping that in the near future Laos can forge
diplomatic relations with the Holy See.
The Catholic community in Laos has about 60 thousand baptized (1% of the
population out of more than 6 million inhabitants), spread in four
apostolic vicariates and accompanied in pastoral service by a score of
priests in all. Bishop Louis-Marie Ling Mangkhanekhoun, apostolic vicar
of Pakse, described the celebration as "moment of full communion with
the Holy See and with the universal Church, in a real year of grace".

Last September, in fact, the local Church in Savannakhet celebrated the
ordination of three new Laotians priests, an important sign that
testifies the attitude of greater openness and freedom granted by the
government. Mgr. Ling points out that Catholics in Laos "wish to live in
harmony and hope to strengthen the fruitful cooperation with the civil
authorities for the good of the Church and the people of Laos".